Lesson 61

Instructions for Lesson 61

Introduce the long-vowel pattern applicable to open syllables.
A syllable that ends with a vowel is referred to as an open syllable.
Words in this category are halo, open, rebate, silent, cubit, judo, and myself.

Open Syllables

 

I & II NEW CONCEPT. Introduce open syllables, which produce a long-vowel sound. When a syllable ends in a vowel (a, e, i, o, or u), the syllable is referred to as an open syllable. When an open syllable is accented, the vowel in that syllable is pronounced as a long vowel. Knowing this pattern helps us pronounce words that are rich in vowels (have two or more vowels). Notice where the accent occurs in the words ba′ • sin, o′ • pen, re′ • bate, si′ • lent, mu′ • sic, and ty′ • po. In each of these words, the first syllable is open (ends with a vowel) and is accented []; therefore, the first syllable is pronounced with a long-vowel sound. A syllable break occurs after each long vowel in these examples.

III LEARN the pattern for words whose open syllables (again, meaning a syllable ending with a vowel) are pronounced with the long-vowel sound, as in judo.

IV LEARN words that have an open long-vowel first syllable and an accented second syllable, as in be • gin′.

V & VI REVIEW words whose first or second syllable is accented. Each of these words has at least one open, long-vowel syllable. Some words in Lesson 61 have more than one open syllable! Prime examples of this are violin |vī′ • ōʹ • lĭn|, solo |sō′ • lō′|, and halo |hā′ • lō’|. Notice that if two vowels are contiguous (side by side) in a word but they fall in different syllables, often both vowels will have a long-vowel sound. We can see this illustrated with the eo in video (|vĭd • ē′ • ō′|), the oa in oasis (|o′ • ā′ • sĭs|), the io in violin (|vī′ • ō′ • lĭn|), and the eo in rodeo (|rō′ • dē′ • ō′|). If the last syllable in a word consists of only the letter o (judo, rodeo, motto), the o will usually be pronounced with the long vowel sound. The definite article the |thē′| follows this long-vowel pattern and is practiced in the Roman numeral V list of words. (The indefinite article the, pronounced |thŭ| or |thә|, will be learned in Lesson 66.)

Long Vowels

The words below have at least one open, accented, long-vowel syllable.

I.

Accent is on the first syllable, which is pronounced with a long-vowel sound.

halo_[ha•lo] rayon_[ra•yon] faking_[fa•king] broken_[bro•ken] poet_[po•et] robot_[ro•bot]

open Ozark frozen bonus rotate moment

II.

rebate female ego silent diet Friday duplex cubit fluent ruin fluid typo

III.

Open syllables pronounced using the vowel’s long sound.

judo motto Plato solo hero zero veto hippo disco Pluto jumbo Velcro™

IV.

The first syllable is pronounced with a long-vowel sound. Accent is on the second syllable.

begin react motel remain eject describe myself reside before Noel create beside

Review: Long Vowels in Open Syllables

V.

unit video I a detail the robot go diet halo quiet located Oreo™ eject monument museum below even ozone rebate direct moment volcano open we

VI.

create Ohio reclaim bonus Utah typo between stamen equator describe myself remain cameo nitrate being ninth music profile report resent equal rodeo prepared zero microwave violin oasis tirade Friday April

Challenge Words: United States iodine prognosis

[U • ni • ted States] [i • o • dine] [prog • no • sis]